Sag Harbor Tree Fund member Neal Hartman was at a benefit auction in Key West, Florida four years ago in which organizers had enlisted participating artists to transform a small Adirondack chair into a piece of art.

That’s when inspiration struck. As a means of fundraising, Hartman saw the idea as one that could be equally successful for the Tree Fund.

This Sunday, the Tree Fund hosts its own benefit auction at Cormaria Retreat House in Sag Harbor. But event creator and co-chair, Hartman, along with fellow Tree Fund member Alexandra Eames, felt a more appropriate medium would be, not chairs, but watering cans.

“Watering Cans as Art” will feature a silent auction of unique, one of a kind works of art created on metal watering cans by some 20 artists. The event will raise money for the Tree Fund’s maintenance program, which takes care of new trees planted in the village.

“The first three years are the most important for the trees to establish their roots,” explains Hartman.

The Tree Fund provides the village with green watering bags that are placed at the base of young trees and filled with water on a weekly basis. The program has allowed for over 300 of Sag Harbor’s young trees to thrive.

On August 1, the Tree Fund’s event at Cormaria will include cocktails and gorgeous views of the harbor. But the real focus will be on the 20 diverse works of art that will be assembled for auction — including one by Sag Harbor’s Gahan Wilson, famed cartoonist for The New Yorker and Playboy

“I was approached by a friend, artist Whitney Hansen. I came home and there was this watering can on my front door,” recalls Wilson. “So I picked it up and took it in and there was a note on it from Whitney and she wanted to know if I would do this for the cause.”

Hansen, who is also a participating artist, kindly lent Wilson the use of her studio.

“As a cartoonist I work on paper with pen and ink and watercolor which wouldn’t do a thing on a watering can,” Wilson remarked.

As for the idea for his can, which features cartoon-inspired (naturally) flowers and birds eagerly gulping droplets of water, Wilson says it came effortlessly.

“It was exactly like doing a cartoon. You just sit there and have a theme and try to get the notion across,” he says. “The idea floats around in your head and all of a sudden pops into view. It’s magical!”

Wilson was delighted to participate, both to show support for the members of the Tree Fund, and in appreciation for the abundant natural beauty of Sag Harbor.

“One of the lovely things about Sag Harbor are the trees,” says Wilson. “They are just wonderful. They are all over the place. And they encourage the birds, which are also all over place.”

“The tree shaded lanes of Sag Harbor are very much what makes the village what it is,” agrees North Haven artist April Gornik, who also contributed her considerable talents for the auction (as did her husband, Eric Fischl).

For Gornik, whose offering features a tree-lined path leading off into the distance, it was important that her watering can reflect her aesthetic as an artist, despite the fact she was working in an unconventional medium.

“I actually specifically wanted to do something that people would recognize as my own. I was trying to figure out an image that I thought would work with the circularity of the surface. The idea of doing the reverse of the bend made sense to me,” explains Gornik, whose painted can plays with the eye’s perception of depth.

Like Wilson, Gornik, too, is supportive of the Tree Fund’s work and was motivated to participate largely by the great knowledge of its members, particularly Tree Fund co-chair Mac Griswold.

“She is truly knowledgeable about botany in a deep way,” shared Gornik, who was first approached to contribute to the fundraiser by Griswold herself.

Michael Grim of Bridgehampton Florist initially felt disadvantaged in that despite being an artist, he certainly is no painter. After nearly 14 hours of straight work on his can however, he was able to produce a shell-laden masterpiece that seems to be a perfect relic of the East End’s beaches.

Part of the fun for Grim was having no idea what his fellow contributing artists would do.

“None of us really knew. Everyone was kind of mum about it,” says Grim. He even laughingly confessed to asking Hartman about the others work, but the co-chair wouldn’t say a thing.

Though entirely satisfied with the beautiful piece of art that is his watering can, Grim nevertheless had to question the practicality of his piece.

“I wonder if everyone is going to be really practical so that the watering can be used, or if they are going to be like me. My can now weighs like 50 pounds!” he laughed.

Such an imaginative means of fundraising has left Hartman with little idea of the sort of auction prices the cans will draw. The base price for all watering cans will be $100 and bidding will move along at $25 increments, but from there it is up to the bidders to do the rest.

“We have no idea how much they will go for. That’s what’s so exciting about it,” says Hartman.

His only expectations are for a “great turnout” and “generous bidders.”

“We are hoping that collectors of these artists will want to own a watering can by them and therefore the sky is the limit.”

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